*KHATMANDU – Australian climber reached the top of Mount Everest Monday,becoming the fastest person to summit the highest mountain on each of theworld’s seven continents.*
Steve Plain conquered Everest 117 days after he reached the peak of MountVinson — the highest mountain in Antarctica — breaking the previousseven-summit speed record by nine days.
“Steve reached the summit this morning with Jon Gupta and Pemba Sherpa,”Iswari Paudel of Himalayan Guides Nepal, which organised logistics forPlain’s Everest ascent, told AFP.
Plain’s GPS tracker also showed he had stood atop the 8,848 metre (29,030foot) mountain.
The Australian began his quest to break the record just four years after aswimming accident left him with a broken back.
He and two team-mates left the last camp before the Everest summit lateSunday to make their final ascent.
AFP Photo
“We are now resting at camp 4, for a few hours at least. Our plan is to setoff this evening aiming to reach the top early tomorrow morning. Time toget this finished off,” Plain wrote in a blog update on Sunday.
The Australian climbed six of the seven summits with British climber Guptawho tweeted Monday: “Hello from the top of the world!!! We’ve done it!!We’re on the summit of Everest!! Words simply can’t begin to describe whatI can see & how I am feeling — it’s very emotional!!”
The previous record for the fastest ascent of the seven summits was setlast year by Polish climber Janusz Kochanski, who did it in 126 days.
There is some controversy over which mountains should make the list of thehighest continental summits.
In one version Australia’s Mount Kosciuszko (2,228 metres) makes the list,while the other list defines the Carstensz Pyramid — a much harder 4,884metre climb in Indonesia — as the highest peak of the Australian continent.
For good measure, Plain climbed both.
As well as the 4,892-metre Vinson, the other summits are Aconcagua (6,962m)in Argentina, Tanzania’s Kilimanjaro (5,895m), Elbrus (5,642m) in Russiaand Denali (6,190m) in the United States.